Lecture
VI
A
few more remarks may be added to what was said in yesterday's
lecture. We have seen how necessary it is — in order to cross
the threshold rightly and enter the spiritual world with clairvoyant
consciousness — to leave behind us all the perceptions of the
physical world as well as everything we ordinarily think, feel, and
will in this world. We have to be prepared to confront beings and
happenings whose characteristics bear no relation at all to what can
be perceived in the sense world. First, we have to strengthen the
soul and its faculties, and then these strengthened, fortified soul
faculties must be carried upwards with us. When we cross the
threshold into the spirit realm, we must take something with us. We
have pointed out that everything the sense world can give us, as well
as the ideas and feelings we acquire there, are all images of what is
perceptible to the senses. Nothing we acquire in this way can be of
use in the spiritual world.
On the other hand, whatever is not an image of the sense
world and has no significance for it — although it can there be
aroused, called forth and given shape in free, inner soul experience
— must be carried up into super-sensible worlds. In the last
lecture we suggested using certain images of triads in their numeric
relationships, images of the harmonious working together of opposites
(especially the luciferic and ahrimanic elements) and of the
intermediate condition. Such ideas have no immediate significance for
the physical world — one can get on quite well without them —
but one must have formed them in the physical world in order to carry
them into spiritual worlds. That is why we tried to show through the
teachings of Benedictus how the luciferic, the ahrimanic and the
middle condition work into the triad of thought, word and writing in
the development of human culture.
In connection with this I would like to mention
something that can be of greatest use in understanding the life of
humanity when looked at in the right way; it is what people from now
on must acquire if our civilization is ever to progress properly.
People will eventually see that they can no longer make do with the
ideas that easygoing human beings today like to form in order to
understand the times and social conditions. In Europe there are folk
groups that speak different languages and there are also those that
differ in their script. The western Europeans write with what are
called Roman letters, but others use an entirely different form of
writing, which is known as Black Letter or Gothic; these exist side
by side. This is a significant phenomenon for anyone wishing to form
a judgment about European culture. Although such things seem
unimportant, they are symptoms arising out of very deep foundations
of existence. When folk groups use different forms of writing, they
will come to a genuine, mutual understanding only by taking up
spiritual initiatives and aims together. Nations writing a different
script give the ahrimanic impulse special points of attack; it is not
enough to look for mutual understanding merely based on the
requirements of the physical plane. A spiritual element must be taken
up by both peoples, and through this, harmony can be sought. For
nations that write with Roman letters, it will be necessary —
in order to understand one another — to carry the spiritual
element so far that understanding takes place even in regard to facts
on the physical plane. One who understands such things can recognize
this in regard to the relationships in European national life. It is
of deep significance that in Central Europe both kinds of writing,
expressing the peculiar relationship of ahrimanic and luciferic
elements, exist side by side. The reason for this is that here a
middle condition cannot be reached without special difficulties: the
Roman alphabet, exposed more to the ahrimanic element, must be
brought into a certain opposition to the Gothic, which is more open
to the luciferic element; it shows a certain trend that in their
handwriting many people have to mix together both scripts. Such an
intermingling of scripts is of immense importance, for it points to
something lying deep in the substrata of the soul, i.e., that such
people have to come to terms with both the luciferic and ahrimanic
elements in a special way. Much will depend on their making a
tremendous effort (if they are writing in German) not to fall into
Gothic when they intend to write Roman and not to fall into Roman
when they intend to write Gothic. It is becoming more and more
necessary to observe life in such minute details and to look at the
symptoms which bring to the surface what is happening in hidden
depths. In this way we shall learn how to acquire in the physical
sense world the concepts, ideas and feelings we can carry fruitfully
across the threshold into the realm of the spirit.
We will certainly have to recognize what extraordinary
talent — even genius — for superficiality there is in our
modern culture in regard to anything expressing itself as
spirituality. Somehow we will have to acquire in the physical world
the concepts for what shines out of the spiritual world and sends its
rays into the physical sense world. Let us therefore look at another
sphere where the luciferic and ahrimanic elements play into the
physical world; we will speak first of the realm of art. In this we
still hold to what has already been said, that in all human artistic
development the luciferic element plays a part, that the luciferic
element is present to the greatest extent in the development of art.
But something more must be added. There are, in general, five
principal arts to be found in the physical world: the art of building
or architecture, sculpture, painting, music and poetry. Other arts
combine and mix together the elements of these five; the art of the
dance, we could say, is a combination of several arts. When one
rightly understands dance, one does so on the basis of fundamental
preconditions in the other arts. Naturally these can be combined.
Of the five arts, architecture and sculpture are those
most particularly open to the ahrimanic impulse. In these arts we are
concerned with form. To accomplish anything in architecture and
sculpture we must find our way into the form element, which is
dominant on the physical plane, for here the Spirits of Form are the
ruling forces. To get to know them, one must plunge into their
spiritual element, as I said before, when speaking figuratively of
putting one's head into an ant hill. A person who has anything to do
with sculpture must plunge his head into the living element of the
Spirits of Form. In the realm of the physical world these Spirits
work cooperatively with the ahrimanic element.
It is important, we will see, especially in such cases,
not simply to assert in a superficial way that we have to protect
ourselves from the ahrimanic element. We should always realize that
such beings as the luciferic and ahrimanic ones have their particular
domains, where normally they live and work, and that bad effects come
about only when they overstep their boundaries. The ahrimanic
impulses have their absolutely legitimate domain in architecture and
sculpture.
On the other hand, we find that music and poetry are two
arts where luciferic impulses are at work. Just as thought takes
place in the solitude of the soul and thereby separates it from the
rest of the world, the experience of music and poetry, too, belongs
to our inner nature where these arts directly meet the luciferic
impulse. In architecture and building we have to consider folk
differences, simply because wherever Ahriman is, Lucifer will play a
part as well, but these arts are directed only to some extent by the
character of a people; in general this element remains neutral.
However, poetry is essentially bound to the luciferic element, which
comes to expression in the differences of folk character. Although
one notices this less in music, here too things lead to
differentiation, much more than in architecture and sculpture.
In this we see again that in order to form concepts for
the higher worlds we cannot get on in the comfortable way many people
would like to do. It is absolutely correct to say that the ahrimanic
element works in architecture and sculpture, the luciferic more in
music and poetry, yet it must also be said: as soon as we have to do
with concepts that are valid also in the higher worlds, it is not so
easy to answer the question once and for all, “In sculpture is
Ahriman more active, or is Lucifer?” It is certainly easy in
the physical world to answer the question, “What color is
common chicory?” with the statement, “It is blue.”
People would like things to be as easy as that for the higher worlds,
but it is wrong to suppose that one can obtain such quick answers.
Still, although all this holds good, the following is true. In
architecture it is generally the case that the ahrimanic impulse is
the stronger, but in sculpture the luciferic influence opposing
Ahriman can be so strong that in some sculptural works Lucifer is
more dominant than Ahriman. Nevertheless, what we said before is
correct, for in the spiritual world there is not only the faculty of
metamorphosis but one can say, everything is everywhere. In truth,
every spiritual element tries to permeate everything. There can be
luciferic sculpture and though poetry is chiefly under the influence
of Lucifer, the ahrimanic influence can work very strongly on music,
so that we can find music with more of Ahriman than of Lucifer.
In the middle between what is generally ahrimanic in
architecture and sculpture and what is luciferic in poetry and music
lies painting. In a way it is a neutral region but not such that we
can comfortably settle down and say to ourselves, “Now I'll go
ahead with painting, for here neither Lucifer nor Ahriman can get at
me.” Actually it is just here in the middle that we are exposed
on both sides most strongly to their attacks; at every moment we must
be on our guard. In the realm of painting we are in the highest
degree vulnerable to one or the other influence. The middle line is
always the place where we have to bring about, in the very strictest
sense of the word, the harmonious balance of polarities by means of
human will and human action.
Looking at the sphere of art as we have done — it
could have been any other sphere — you see that we acquire
certain concepts without which, of course, we can manage quite well
on the physical plane. For it is obvious that when we are willing to
remain shallow and superficial, we can get along easily enough on
this plane even if we don't find music luciferic and architecture
ahrimanic! But if we want to manage without such concepts, we will
not be able to form on the physical plane any ideas, thoughts, or
feelings that will strengthen our soul and enable it to cross the
threshold successfully and rise into the realm of spirit; we will
have to remain here below on the physical plane.
We must therefore acquire concepts,
feelings and ideas for the realm of the spirit if we really wish to
cross the threshold, and while these must indeed be invoked by the
physical, they will nevertheless have to rise above the
physical-sense realm. Then with strengthened soul we will cross the
threshold and become familiar with this world already characterized
as a place of living thought-beings, engaged in spiritual
conversation. With our strengthened soul we will become familiar with
a world of beings that consist of thought-substance; through this
thought-substance they are more alive, more individual, more real
than any human being on earth. These beings within their
thought-substance are just as real as any man of flesh and blood on
the physical plane. We can gradually find our way in this world where
a thought-language passes between one being and another, and where
our soul is forced to carry on thought-conversations with the
thought-beings if we want to arrive at a relationship with them. I
have intimated this in my book
The Threshold of the Spiritual World;
[*Published together with
A Road to Self Knowledge,
Rudolf Steiner Press, 1975.] more details can now be
added. Because of the great responsibility in writing all this, I
have tried to avoid in the book a systematic description and instead
have put in aphoristic form the things that can be useful even if you
have already absorbed everything in earlier lecture cycles and books.
As living thought-beings, we have to adjust to the
spiritual realm of which it can be said:
At this place words are deeds
and further deeds must follow them.
( 14 )
A
human being in the physical world carries out his actions through the
movement of his hands; we have described how thoughts, living within
the cosmic Word, are also direct actions. Whatever is spoken
accomplishes a deed. That is what matters in the spiritual world. A
being is active towards another being; a being is active in relation
to the external spiritual world around it; both of these actions are
contained in spirit conversations. The spoken word is action.
Therefore we have to bring ourselves upward into spirit regions in
order to find ourselves as living thought-beings among other living
thought-beings. We must conduct ourselves as do the other
thought-beings, that is, allow our own words to be actions, to put it
simply.
What do we find in those spirit regions? No longer do we
find for our own use what we find down in the physical or even in the
elemental worlds. This self that we carry through the physical and
elemental worlds is the sum total of our experiences, gathered
together from the impressions of the physical world and from
everything on the physical plan that thinking, feeling and willing
developed in our soul. But neither the impressions nor the feeling,
thinking, and willing as they meet us on the physical plane have any
significance at all in the spiritual world. There, instead of the
so-called human self of the physical and elemental worlds, we find
something else; namely, the part of oneself that indeed is always
present in the depths of soul even though the ordinary physical
consciousness can not know it. Like another being we will find our
other self; this second self we find in the spiritual world.
At the close of these lectures, as in the
closing section of
The Threshold of the Spiritual World,
I shall indicate for anyone who wants to ferret out contradictions,
how the terms employed here are related to the terminology I used in
Theosophy
and
Occult Science.
But here it can be said:
a person lives in his physical body in the physical world around him.
When he comes away from it and has experiences outside the physical
body, he is having those experiences in his etheric body with the
elemental world around him; and when he comes out of that world as
well, he is experiencing the spiritual realm in his astral body. With
this experience — feeling oneself in the astral body —
there will be a meeting in the spiritual world, the meeting with the
other self, the second self,
( 15 )
of which Johannes Thomasius speaks at the end of
The Guardian of the Threshold,
and which stands throughout the whole action of
The Souls' Awakening
at the side of the first self of Johannes Thomasius, summoning forth his
experiences. Let me describe the essence of this other self; it is
what a person comes to recognize when he learns within his astral
body to perceive and feel and observe in the spiritual world. It is
what lives from one life on earth to another, from incarnation to
incarnation. In moving from one life on earth to the next one,
between death and a new birth, it weaves itself so mysteriously into
our being that the physical consciousness usually cannot perceive
this other self, for it is actually within the spiritual world even
though bound up with our physical being.
How is this other self active? It has just been said
that it belongs to the realm of the spirit as a living thought-being
among other living thought-beings, whose words are deeds; they
accomplish all they do through what we can call Inspiration. The
second self acts inspiringly in man's nature. What does it inspire?
Our karma, our destiny. Here we discover a mysterious process:
whatever our experience, whether painful or joyous, whatever it is
that happens in our life, it is inspired by our other self, working
from the spiritual world into this one. If you are walking along the
street and something happens to you that seems accidental, it is
inspired by your other self from out of the spiritual world. So you
see that something like Inspiration in the spiritual world reveals
itself on the physical plane and brings about your destiny in large
and small happenings. Your destiny is inspired by your other self,
out of the realm of the spirit.
A clairvoyant soul entering this realm
perceives in the spirit-conversation a revelation of what can be put
into the phrase: words are deeds. However, everything that
happens in the spiritual world stamps itself upon the physical World.
Whether you see a stone, a plant, a cloud, or lightning —
behind all these stand spiritual beings and spiritual processes.
Furthermore, behind the physical events of your destiny stand
spiritual beings and spiritual processes. What are they?
Inspirations! They are brought about by a conversation in the
spiritual world. The cosmic Word is active as the inspirer of human
destiny! This is of great significance for your spiritual perception
on meeting your other self. You no longer think then of your human
personality within its ordinary limits alone, for you extend yourself
— and this must include your other self — to cover your
entire destiny. You are only then a truly whole human being when —
in just the same way that you say, “This finger is part of
myself and belongs on the physical plane to my ego” — you
also say, “It is part of myself to bang my thumb or take a
painful fall, for all these things are inspired by my other self.”
However, we must bear in mind just how we
meet this other self on crossing the threshold into the realm of
spirit. Again and again we must recollect and make clear to ourselves
that in all we have learned, observed and experienced in the physical
world and even in the elemental world, there is nothing in them
similar to the characteristics of the spiritual world where thoughts
are living beings. If we were to enter the spirit realm only with
what we have discovered in the physical and elemental worlds, then we
would be confronting nothingness. What indeed can we bring into this
realm? Let us consider the question carefully. The soul must become
accustomed not to perceive or think or feel or will in the spirit
realm as it does in the physical or in the elemental worlds. All of
that must be left behind. However, it must remember what it
perceived, thought, felt, willed in the physical world. Just as we
carry into later periods of life the memories of earlier times, so
must we carry over into the spirit realm out of the physical plane
everything that has been strengthened and invigorated in our soul. We
must enter the spiritual world with a soul that recollects the
physical world.
Then we have to endure a certain experience that can be
described in the following way: Imagine a moment in your ordinary
earth life when all your sense perception suddenly stops; when you
can no longer see nor hear, no longer are able, to think or feel or
desire anything new. Every kind of life activity stops. You would
know only what you remember. In exactly this situation you find
yourself, when you rise into the spiritual world with clairvoyant
consciousness. There is nothing there at first that will provide new
perceptions. Your understanding comes only through remembering; your
existence depends on what has remained to you of your memories. Your
soul is aware that it can say of itself, “You now are only what
you once were; your existence consists of your past; present and
future have no meaning for you; your being is made up of what you
have been.” One could perhaps say all this easily enough —
but to see oneself as nothing but memory, with no perception of the
present moment, to speak of one's being as a mere ‘has been,’
is a remarkable experience.
When the clairvoyant soul has penetrated so far and
endured this experience, then for the first time the human being will
begin to have a true understanding for the being whose name has now
been mentioned so often, for Lucifer. The human soul, in passing out
into the spirit realm, realizes for a moment, “You are only a
being of the past.” Lucifer is the one who has become in the
cosmic order forevermore such a being of the past, a mere has-been, a
remnant of earth epochs that have died away, of what cosmic epochs
had brought to his soul. And Lucifer's life — because the other
divine-spiritual beings of normal earth evolution have condemned him
to the past — consists in fighting with the aid of his past to
gain a present and future.
Thus Lucifer stands before the clairvoyant vision,
preserving in his life and soul the divine spiritual glories of world
creation, yet condemned to realize, “They were once yours.”
And now this eternal struggle begins: fighting to add present and
future to his past in the cosmic order. To perceive the macrocosmic
resemblance of Lucifer to the microcosmic nature of the human soul as
it crosses the threshold between the elemental and the spiritual
worlds is to perceive the profound tragedy of this figure of Lucifer.
And then we begin to divine something of the great cosmic secrets
resting deep in the womb of existence, where not only one being
struggles with another but even an epoch of time confronts another in
battle, as they evolve into beings. A true picture of the world
begins to take shape, pouring deep earnestness and dignity into the
soul. Here we will sense something that can be called the breath of
Eternal Necessities, such as those experienced in the World Midnight
— where lightnings flash into existence, illumining even the
figure of Lucifer, but they:
... die on recognition,
and dying shape themselves to scripts of fate
forever actively engraved in souls.
( 16 )
The
human soul itself, as it grows into life in the spiritual worlds, has
a moment where it is a mere “has-been” and confronts
nothingness; it is a single point in the universe, experiencing
itself only as a point. But then this point becomes a spectator and
begins to observe something else. Our human soul, become microscopic,
has at first no content — just as a single dot has none, but
now it finds itself belonging as a third entity to two others. The
first to make its appearance is what lives in our memory. This is
like an external world which we look back on, saying, “All that
is my past.” At first, without really knowing it, we ourselves
stand there next to this past existence that we have brought across
the threshold into the spiritual world, providing it with a life as
thought-being. If then we have a feeling of utter calmness in our
soul, whatever we have brought there as our past begins a spirit
conversation with the living thought-beings around it. We can observe
— like an objective spectator, standing nearby, though at the
same time a mere dot — the other two beginning their
conversation. Whatever we have brought with us in the way of thought
content unfolds a spirit conversation in cosmic language with a
spiritual, living thought-being of that realm; there we listen to
what our own past discusses with the living spiritual being. At first
we are like nothing at all, but then, even as a nothing, we are born
through listening to our own past converse with the spiritual beings
of the spirit realm. Listening begins to fill us with new inward
contents. We learn now to recognize ourselves when we are like a
single point and feel ourselves as such, listening to the
conversation of our own past with a living spiritual being. And the
more we take in of this spirit conversation between our own past and
the future, the more we actually become we ourselves become a
spirit being.
In this process in the spiritual world we find ourselves
within a triad. One member of the triad is our own past being, which
we have carried up into the spiritual world; we have won it for
ourselves in so far as it was able beforehand to reveal its
spirituality in the sense world, and then across the threshold to
perceive itself as our past life. The second member of the triad is
the whole spiritual environment; the third member is our self. This
is the threefoldness of the spiritual world: Within the triad,
through the antithesis of past life and living spiritual being, the
third, the middle part, the mere point-like part, develops itself and
becomes — through listening to the spirit conversation of the
other two — more and more filled out: a being that is
developing itself within the spiritual world. In that world we thus
“become” ourselves in clairvoyant consciousness.
This is what I wanted to convey to you — using
words, of course, that are limited because they have to be borrowed
from the language of the physical world. However, one has to try as
well as possible with such words to characterize these sublime and
profound relationships. For it is through these relationships alone
that we can come to know our true being. And this, as I said, we
receive in the spiritual world through listening to the two other
thought-beings. It has been the task of this cycle of lectures to try
to lead us toward understanding our true nature.
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